Interview Outfit? Hint: Don’t Remix the Suit & Tie

The interview is one of the rare times when you don’t want to differentiate yourself. No matter your long-term goals, aim for assimilation in dress. Success is when the interviewer doesn’t take stock of your outfit.

Here are more specific guidelines for each interview type:

With Admissions Officers/Group Interview – On-Campus and Off-Campus

Everyone: Wear a professional business suit and minimal jewelry.

Women: Wear stockings if you wear a dress/skirt (even in California!), although a pantsuit works perfectly.

Men: Wear a tie.

Off-campus, alumni

First, follow the lead of the interviewer – if the interviewer says the dress code is business casual (my standard line was “this is a not a coat-and-tie interview”) – don’t wear a suit. This is not a stress or “test” interview; if they tell you to dress business casual, then follow directions.

If you’re coming directly from work where you normally wear a suit, then men should remove their ties and women can remove their jackets (weather permitting). Find a way to tone it down a little.

None of the alums who interviewed me gave me clues; however, one interview was at his office and the other was at Starbucks during the day. Fortunately for both interviews, I had donor meetings earlier in the day, so I was stuck over-dressed, at worst. When both mentioned they forgot to tell me to dress down, I shared that I had meetings with donors, which segued into my work.

If the interviewer doesn’t give you direction, consider the location and time:

If it’s Starbucks on the weekend, wear business casual. Admit.me considers business casual to be nice slacks, professional skirt, dress shirt, no tie, or a professional dress. No jeans, tshirt (or any type of uncollared shirt), or tennis shoes.

If it’s their office during business hours (even at the end of the day) – wear a suit.

When I interviewed applicants, my expectations adjusted based on whether I was an alum or part of the Admissions team:

When I was an alumni interviewer, I always advised applicants to dress business casual since we were meeting at Starbucks. Unless someone came in a full-blown suit on Saturday at 10am after being told NOT to wear a suit, I didn’t factor their dress into my evaluation. I felt pretty strongly that people applying to Wharton (my alma mater) know how to dress and since Southern California is already casual, it was a waste for people to dress up.

But, when I was part of the admissions team on-campus at Wharton, I expected applicants to wear a suit because they were interviewing on-campus and didn’t know whether they’d interview with students or full-time staff.

Skype/Video Conference

Definitely wear a professional shirt and jacket. It’s easy to not care about your pants, but we suggest wearing (at least) nice slacks on the bottom – consider how ridiculous you’d look if you had to stand up and your interviewer saw your PowerPuff or Johnny Bravo PJ bottoms!

General Clothing Tips

Try things out…but not everything.

Do the sleeves fall funny when you shake someone’s hand? Does the dress shirt fall awkwardly? How does the dress look when you’re sitting down?

Don’t break in new shoes that day. You may have to walk a lot or walk up a flight of uneven stairs. You don’t want to navigate any of this in shoes you’ve never worn before. Your shoes can be new, but break them in before the interview.